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THE BOY & THE BOOK by David Michael Slater Kirkus Star

THE BOY & THE BOOK

(a wordless story)

by David Michael Slater ; illustrated by Bob Kolar

Pub Date: March 10th, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-58089-562-0
Publisher: Charlesbridge

A nearly wordless picture book presents the “I can read” moment.

A small boy with a determined, mischievous expression enters a library in the company of his mother. The look on the boy’s face, perfectly rendered by Kolar (as are all the expressions), alarms the library books, and they run for their lives. The boy captures a blue-bound book and begins manhandling it as he would any toy, in the process ripping and creasing the pages. The other books look on, horrified. The boy’s mother (who, unsettlingly, seems to care not a whit that the boy has mistreated a book) comes to get him. He tosses the book to the floor as he leaves. The other books lovingly glue and tape the battered book back together. A new day, and—horrors!—the boy returns. Again, the books scatter. But then the blue-bound book sees the boy’s forlorn expression and suddenly understands. The book leaps from its safe perch to the boy, the boy opens the book, and it is here that the four words of text make their powerful statement—“Once upon a time.” For the boy has learned to read, and now books are cherished and library manners learned.

Presented as a grand adventure, the moment when a child first learns to read is powerfully rendered in this well-made story.

(Picture book. 2-5)